Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada

Oriented lakes—characterized by elongate forms, central basins and shallow littoral shelves—are common features of circum-arctic coastal lowlands. The environmental conditions, geological processes and chronology associated with the development of oriented lakes, however, are little known but essent...

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Main Authors: Stephen Wolfe, Julian Murton, Mark Bateman, John Barlow
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Oriented-lake_development_in_the_context_of_late_Quaternary_landscape_evolution_McKinley_Bay_Coastal_Plain_western_Arctic_Canada/23307659
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spelling ftunivsussexfig:oai:figshare.com:article/23307659 2023-06-18T03:39:03+02:00 Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada Stephen Wolfe Julian Murton Mark Bateman John Barlow 2020-08-15T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Oriented-lake_development_in_the_context_of_late_Quaternary_landscape_evolution_McKinley_Bay_Coastal_Plain_western_Arctic_Canada/23307659 unknown 10779/uos.23307659.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Oriented-lake_development_in_the_context_of_late_Quaternary_landscape_evolution_McKinley_Bay_Coastal_Plain_western_Arctic_Canada/23307659 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Uncategorised value Text Journal contribution 2020 ftunivsussexfig 2023-06-07T23:39:47Z Oriented lakes—characterized by elongate forms, central basins and shallow littoral shelves—are common features of circum-arctic coastal lowlands. The environmental conditions, geological processes and chronology associated with the development of oriented lakes, however, are little known but essential for understanding how such Arctic lowlands evolve. Using combined techniques of field and drill-log stratigraphy and sedimentology, luminescence and radiocarbon dating methods and geomorphic mapping, we reconstruct the landscape evolution leading toward oriented-lake formation on the McKinley Bay Coastal Plain of western Arctic, Canada—a region with over 900 oriented lakes. Most lakes with deep central basins are inherited from a preglacial braidplain (ca. 73–27 ka) and alluvial braided-channel network that extended beyond the glacial limit (ca. 18.6–14.3 ka). Eolian erosion, active during the lateglacial and postglacial period (ca. 12.8–1.9 ka), reworked fluvial deposits. Eolian processes modified existing basins and created other shallow deflationary basins, as small barchanoid dunes migrated under cold, dry paraglacial conditions between about 12.8 and 10.7 ka. Vegetation cover developed at the onset of the early Holocene climatic optimum ca. 10.7 ka, and parabolic dunes were active between 9.6 and 4.6 ka. Thus, oriented lakes developed in basins conditioned by fluvial and eolian processes. In the absence of much near-surface ground ice, lateral expansion of deep-basin lakes and shallow stabilized deflationary basins predominated during the late Holocene through wind-induced wave and current processes. Overall, this sequence of oriented-lake formation does not support a thaw-lake cycle but, rather, small-basin evolution of a periglacial landscape. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic McKinley Bay University of Sussex: Figshare Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection University of Sussex: Figshare
op_collection_id ftunivsussexfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorised value
spellingShingle Uncategorised value
Stephen Wolfe
Julian Murton
Mark Bateman
John Barlow
Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
topic_facet Uncategorised value
description Oriented lakes—characterized by elongate forms, central basins and shallow littoral shelves—are common features of circum-arctic coastal lowlands. The environmental conditions, geological processes and chronology associated with the development of oriented lakes, however, are little known but essential for understanding how such Arctic lowlands evolve. Using combined techniques of field and drill-log stratigraphy and sedimentology, luminescence and radiocarbon dating methods and geomorphic mapping, we reconstruct the landscape evolution leading toward oriented-lake formation on the McKinley Bay Coastal Plain of western Arctic, Canada—a region with over 900 oriented lakes. Most lakes with deep central basins are inherited from a preglacial braidplain (ca. 73–27 ka) and alluvial braided-channel network that extended beyond the glacial limit (ca. 18.6–14.3 ka). Eolian erosion, active during the lateglacial and postglacial period (ca. 12.8–1.9 ka), reworked fluvial deposits. Eolian processes modified existing basins and created other shallow deflationary basins, as small barchanoid dunes migrated under cold, dry paraglacial conditions between about 12.8 and 10.7 ka. Vegetation cover developed at the onset of the early Holocene climatic optimum ca. 10.7 ka, and parabolic dunes were active between 9.6 and 4.6 ka. Thus, oriented lakes developed in basins conditioned by fluvial and eolian processes. In the absence of much near-surface ground ice, lateral expansion of deep-basin lakes and shallow stabilized deflationary basins predominated during the late Holocene through wind-induced wave and current processes. Overall, this sequence of oriented-lake formation does not support a thaw-lake cycle but, rather, small-basin evolution of a periglacial landscape.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Stephen Wolfe
Julian Murton
Mark Bateman
John Barlow
author_facet Stephen Wolfe
Julian Murton
Mark Bateman
John Barlow
author_sort Stephen Wolfe
title Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
title_short Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
title_full Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
title_fullStr Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
title_full_unstemmed Oriented-lake development in the context of late Quaternary landscape evolution, McKinley Bay Coastal Plain, western Arctic Canada
title_sort oriented-lake development in the context of late quaternary landscape evolution, mckinley bay coastal plain, western arctic canada
publishDate 2020
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Oriented-lake_development_in_the_context_of_late_Quaternary_landscape_evolution_McKinley_Bay_Coastal_Plain_western_Arctic_Canada/23307659
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
McKinley Bay
genre_facet Arctic
McKinley Bay
op_relation 10779/uos.23307659.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Oriented-lake_development_in_the_context_of_late_Quaternary_landscape_evolution_McKinley_Bay_Coastal_Plain_western_Arctic_Canada/23307659
op_rights CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
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